HARARE, Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe's military and police are arresting scores of opposition members and activists after authorities thwarted an anti-government protest last week, according to rights groups.
More than 60 people have been arrested so far
in the continuing clampdown, said Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights, which is
providing lawyers for the arrested people. Last week internationally known
author Tsitsi Dangarembga was arrested for a peaceful protest and spent a night
in police cells before being released on bail.
Zimbabwe’s main opposition party, the MDC
Alliance, says dozens of its officials have been arrested or have gone into
hiding. If state agents do not find the person they want to arrest, they often
vandalize their homes and harass their relatives, said opposition spokesman
Tendai Biti.
Human rights groups accuse President Emmerson
Mnangagwa’s administration of clamping down on dissent under the guise of
enforcing anti-COVID-19 lockdown rules.
The Zimbabwean police and government officials
have repeatedly denied allegations of human rights abuses, saying those
arrested or being sought by the police were inciting people to revolt against
Mnangagwa’s government.
On Monday, a judge postponed until Thursday a
bail hearing for Hopewell Chin’ono, an investigative journalist who has been in
jail for two weeks on accusations of mobilizing the foiled protests.
Another investigative journalist, Mdudzuzi
Mathuthu, prominent for reporting on alleged government corruption linked to
purchases of COVID-19 personal procurement equipment and drugs, is in hiding.
“I am hiding like a rat in my own country for
doing nothing more than my job,” Mathuthu told The Associated Press Monday.
“Journalism is just a job, but in Zimbabwe it
can be a matter of life and death. They have not only come just after me, but
my family as well,” he said.
His nephew, Tawanda Muchehiwa, who family
members say was abducted by state security agents last week to force the
journalist to surrender, was dropped near his home Saturday, hours after a
judge ordered police to “produce him.”
Muchehiwa, a journalism student, is receiving
medical treatment after alleged torture caused him to suffer “severe injuries
resulting in acute renal failure and severe tissue damage around the buttocks
and under the feet,” according to his lawyer, Nqobani Sithole. The alleged
abuse included forcing him to drink his own urine, the lawyer said.
The ongoing arrests are “worrying,” said Dewa
Mavhinga, Human Rights Watch director for Southern Africa. He noted that some
students were arrested for simply walking in their neighborhoods with a
Zimbabwean flag or tweeting about Zimbabwe's deepening economic and political
problems.
“The continued security forces clampdown shows
that nothing has changed since the repressive days of Robert Mugabe. Those who
protested on Friday did so in small groups, yet activists are still being
hunted down, it shows lack of respect for the right to peacefully demonstrate,”
he said.
Mugabe ruled Zimbabwe with an iron fist for 37 years, before being deposed through a coup in 2017. Mnangagwa, who had been Mugabe's deputy, promised “a flowering of democracy” when he took over after the coup, but critics say his rule has been rife with abuses.
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